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  1. get on vi phrasal. informal (in life: advance) (con la vita) andare avanti, procedere ⇒, continuare ⇒ vi. To get on in life, you need to be willing to work hard. Se vuoi andare avanti nella vita, devi voler lavorare sodo. get on [sth] vi + prep. (bus, train: board) (mezzo di trasporto) salire ⇒ vi.

  2. to manage or deal with a situation, especially successfully: How are you getting on in your new home? get on with We're getting on quite well with the decorating. More examples. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. (CONTINUE) B2 UK. to continue doing something, especially work: I'll leave you to get on then, shall I? More examples.

  3. In questa pagina: getting on, get on. WordReference English-Italiano Dictionary © 2022: Principal Translations/Traduzioni principali. Inglese. Italiano. getting on adj. adjective: Describes a noun or pronoun--for example, "a tall girl," "an interesting book," "a big house." informal (aging, becoming old) invecchiare ⇒ vi.

  4. get on vi phrasal. informal (in life: advance) (con la vita) andare avanti, procedere ⇒, continuare ⇒ vi. To get on in life, you need to be willing to work hard. Se vuoi andare avanti nella vita, devi voler lavorare sodo. get on [sth] vi + prep. (bus, train: board) (mezzo di trasporto) salire ⇒ vi.

  5. Traduzione di "getting on" in italiano. Verbo. salire su salire sul andando salire sulla dando sui. andare avanti. salendo su. cavando. salirà su. cava. Mostrare più. Last year, my biggest regret was not getting on that plane with you. L'anno scorso, il mio maggior rimpianto è stato non salire su quell'aereo con te.

  6. Definition of get on phrasal verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. get on. phrasal verb. get on. (also get along) used to talk or ask about how well somebody is doing in a particular situation. He's getting on very well at school. How did you get on at the interview? Want to learn more?

  7. 28 lug 2011 · – GEdgar. Apr 16, 2013 at 15:20. Add a comment. 3 Answers. Sorted by: 3. Google Ngrams shows " How are you getting on ? " as a common phrase from the mid 19th century most of which seem to be British publications. From the usage I see, I would not classify it as slang. Rather just a colloquial way of asking "How do you do ?"